Companies chasing products in precision medicine and digital health are getting more venture capital love as investors see the upside of innovations in genomics and other cutting-edge technologies.

Life sciences deals with valuations exceeding $100 million doubled to 28 percent in the third quarter from 14 percent in the first quarter of 2016. That compares to technology deals with similar valuations dropping to 23 percent from 29 percent during the same period, the Cooley Venture Financing Reportfor the third quarter said.

Looking at return on investment, the Trump administration hasn’t voiced “any change in the tone or direction of IP law in the short term or even in the long term,” David Suter, a Harness, Dickey & Pierce PLC intellectual property attorney who advises life sciences companies, said Jan. 25.

Health-care life sciences IP holders have issues, “but those issues I think have more to do frankly with the more recent court decisions. I’m not sure that the executive branch is going to make a difference on that in the short term or even the long term,” Suter told Bloomberg BNA.